TMC And AMC on Dish Network gives me a Front Row Seat for all of My Favorite Old Movies
Arts & Entertainment → Television / Movies
- Author Bob Jackson
- Published January 10, 2011
- Word count 513
TMC And AMC on Dish Network gives me a Front Row Seat for all of My Favorite Old Movies I love old movies, can’t get enough of them. I get a real kick out of watching the great movie stars from the 1930s and 1940s, people who "lit up the screen." If you have ever seen a flick (no, call it a film) with such acting legends as John Wayne, Clark Gable, Humphrey Bogart, Edward G. Robinson and the immortal (in my opinion) James Cagney, you know what I mean.
These men were great stars and they could act. Moreover, they performed in films that had real plots and dialogue, movies that got your intention when they began, and held it for the ninety minutes or so it took to reach "The End." Actresses from this period, call it "The Golden Age of Hollywood," were every bit as dynamic and compelling as their male co-stars. Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Katherine Hepburn and many others from that era dazzled audiences in film after film.
The films were truly great. I can think of such memorable movies as "It Happened One Night, an award winning movie made in 1934 that starred Gable and Claudette Colbert. It was a romantic comedy, a film genre that was popular back then. John Wayne’s heroics in seemingly countless films, beginning in the 1930s, helped him gain immense popularity with movie fans that lasted until his death. But it is his appearances in WWII war films (made while the war still raged) that have made me a fan.
James Cagney, movie tough guy, made me sit up and watch as he danced and sang his way across the screen in his performance as George M. Cohan in the movie entitled "Yankee Doodle Dandy." If you had already seen Cagney play a crazed bad guy in "White Heat," you could never imagine this "other side" of him. And drama or musical, Cagney lit up the screen.
These men were great stars and they could act. Moreover, they performed in films that had real plots and dialogue, movies that got your intention when they began, and held it for the ninety minutes or so it took to reach "The End." Actresses from this period, call it "The Golden Age of Hollywood," were every bit as dynamic and compelling as their male co-stars. Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Katherine Hepburn and many others from that era dazzled audiences in film after film.
I’ve always enjoyed movies that starred Cary Grant … and there are lots of them. His sophistication, clean-cut appearance and flair for comedy (and drama) helped him to achieve international fame. But his performances in "North by Northwest" and "The Philadelphia Story" really hammer home his brilliance. I often wonder if movie audiences in the 1930s and 1940s even realized that they were witnessing great performances. I am certainly aware of it and that’s why I’m grateful that my TV programming package includes networks that show old movies. Truthfully, I can’t get enough of them.
By: Bob Jackson
Bob helps people understand DISH Network TV Service and the DISH Network Channel Packages. He knows all of the DISH Network Promotions and Deals for new customers.
Article source: https://articlebiz.comRate article
Article comments
There are no posted comments.
Related articles
- “The Rise of the Antihero: From Tony Soprano to Joker.”
- “When the Camera Lies: The True Stories Behind Hollywood’s Greatest Myths.”
- “Chaos Behind the Camera: Legendary On-Set Feuds and Filmmaking Nightmares That Changed Hollywood Forever.”
- “Alternate Reels: How Cinema Might Have Changed if History Rolled Differently.”
- “Francis Ford Coppola: Genius and Chaos in the Making of a Hollywood Legend.”
- Why the ARRI Alexa Mini Still Outnumbers Every 4K Flagship on Professional Sets
- “Marlon Brando: The Actor Who Changed Hollywood Forever.”
- “The Genius and the Scandal: Woody Allen’s Films and the Shadows Behind Them.”
- “Leonardo DiCaprio: The Reluctant Star Who Redefined Hollywood Stardom.”
- “Behind the Curtain: The Private World of Raymond Burr.”
- “From Pixels to Projectors: How Video Games Reshaped Modern Cinema.”
- “The Art of the Slow Burn: Revisiting 1970s American Cinema.”
- “Riding the Ponderosa: The Enduring Legacy of Bonanza.”
- “Navigating Nostalgia and Novelty in The Matrix Resurrections.”
- “Sin and Celluloid: Pre-Code Hollywood and the Scandalous Films Before the Censors Arrived.”
- North by Northwest: The Movie That Made Danger Look Effortlessly Cool.
- “Beyond the Lens: How Women Directors, Producers, and Writers Are Reshaping Cinema.”
- “Riding the Ponderosa: The Enduring Legacy of Bonanza.”
- “Beyond the Gavel: Cinema’s Most Compelling Courtroom Dramas.”
- Denzel Washington: Crafting a Legacy of Strength, Gravitas, and Change.
- “Blood, Power, and Legacy: The Godfather Trilogy’s Triumphs and Tragedies.”
- Visionaries Beyond Tomorrow: The Five Directors Who Reimagined Sci-Fi Cinema.
- “Greta Gerwig and the Rise of Women Behind the Camera in Hollywood.”
- “The Crown of Cinema: From Citizen Kane to The Godfather.”
- The Evolution of James Bond: Six Decades of Cinema’s Most Enduring Spy.
- The Man Behind the Cape: The Life and Tragic Fall of George Reeves.
- The 24-290 mm Paradox: Why a 12× Zoom from 2001 Still Outresolves Today’s 8K Sensors
- The 100 mm Paradox: Why the “Boring” Focal Length Is Quietly Becoming the Most Dangerous Tool on Set
- The Invisible Science Behind the "Natural" Look: How Modern Optics Quietly Rewrite Cinematic Language
- Mastering Smooth Transitions: How Crane Systems Shape Emotional Storytelling